释义 |
dyke; dike noun- a lesbian, especially a “mannish”, aggressive one US, 1931
Safely used by insiders, with caution by outsiders. - I never saw such a crowd of dikes and faggots. — Horace McCoy, Kiss Tomorrow Good-bye, p. 277, 1948
- Inspector, you are acquainted with the vernacular for Lesbian, are you not–the word “dyke?” — San Francisco Examiner, p. 8, 5 March 1953
- I use that as an excuse (because Alice dike-like silent unpleasant and strange and likes no one) to lay the two bills on Mardou’s dishes at sink[.] — Jack Kerouac, The Subterraneans, p. 74, 1958
- A dyke in blue jeans, drunk and jealous, throws her bottle. — Willard Motley, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, p. 247, 1958
- This is not a queer bar–it is an outcast bar–Negroes and vagrant whites, heads and hypes, dikes and queens. — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 184, 1963
- [T]he pool-playing dykes and femmes sit at tables in one corner away from the juke-box, and the “straights” fill out the rest of the bar. — Roger Gordon, Hollywood’s Sexual Underground, p. 18, 1966
- It’s hard to spot dikes, cause sometimes we’re married to them. — Lenny Bruce, The Essential Lenny Bruce, p. 163, 1967
- If you mean am I a dike, no. Not at all. — Gore Vidal, Myra Breckinridge, p. 140, 1968
- [W]e was renting hotel suites, feeding the dykes coke, and watching the show. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 80, 1975
- — Multicultural Management Program Fellows Dictionary of Cautionary Words and Phrases, 1989
- I call myself a dyke so it’s not too devastating when some throwback screams it at me as I’m leaving a bar at night. — Chasing Amy, 1997
- She’s a fuckin’ dyke. — Stuart Browne, Dangerous Parking, p. 45, 2000
- Come and TRY IT DYKE! — Jack Allen, When the Whistle Blows, p. 140, 2000
- a toilet UK, 1923
- “Meet you in the dyke,” Mick hissed and fled. — Russell Braddon, The Naked Island, p. 11, 1952
- You, Tramp, check the dikes; you Evan, have a look in the saloon bar. — Geoff Wyatt, Saltwater Saints, p. 58, 1969
- It’s normal for you to go to the dyke fifty times a night. — Tim Winton, That Eye, The Sky, p. 120, 1986
- dipipanone, an analgesic opiate used for recreational narcotic effect UK
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 48, 1996
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